Pull . 12 . X . 1921 . PAREVIA. By Dr. A. Seitz. 361 
H. tipolis Drc. (= viola borealis Rothsch.) (46 h). The band separating the apical disc is much broader 
and more hyaline than yellow. Thereby it resembles more a Neritos drucei (46 e). Southern part of Central 
America and Colombia; the figured specimen from Villavicencio. 
H. lucens Schs. (46 h) is nearly exactly like the preceding species, but the dark parts in the forewing 
are deep dark violettish-brown instead of light purple brown. French Guiana. 
H. interna Schs. (46 h) is easily recognizable by the purple red abdomen and by the dark apical 
spot being removed from the margin, but situate on the costa. French Guiana. 
H. klagesi Rothsch. (46 h). The discous spot before the apex is at the apex itself pushed back by a 
smaller spot of the yellow ground-colour; it is contingent with the dark inner-marginal spot by a narrow bridge. 
The latter spot from the direction of the proximal margin lighter, bluish-white. From Fonte Boa on the Amazon. 
H. rhodocraspis Hmps. (46 h) represents a parallel form to the Neritos of the cofes-group (46 f) and 
to the Paranerita of the niobe- group (46 a). The hindlegs are much longer and, by means of sprawling hair¬ 
brushes, transformed into woolly paws. Colombia and Peru ; the figured specimen from Villavicencio (Coll. Fassl). 
H. ockendeni Rothsch. ($ = ockendeni posterior Rothsch.) (46 h) has much broader wings than the 
preceding which it otherwise resembles. The tooth of the marginal area projecting into the forewing is here 
placed higher than in rhodocraspis , the legs not conspicuously changed. Venezuela, Peru. 
H. tramoia Joicey. Size of ockendeni ; the yellow spot of the middle of the costa extends along the 
costal margin towards the base and to the apex; the marginal yellow from the apex almost to the anal angle 
projects proximally on the uppermost median. Hindwing yellow, the inner-marginal part slightly tinged pink. 
Abdomen purple-red. Colombia. 
H. carinaria Schs. (46 i). The yellow costal triangle and the small spots of the middle of the border 
on the forewing very small; hindwings yellow, tinted reddish. French Guiana. 
H. incerta Schs. (46 i) very closely allied to carinaria, the small costal spots not larger, but the marginal 
yellow in the forewing more extensive. Forewings more pointed, hindwings smaller, more intensely tinged 
red. French Guiana. 
H. declivis Schs. (46 i) is one of the smallest species; forewings almost like in incerta , but still darker; 
hindwings still smaller than there, yolk-coloured, not red. French Guiana. 
H. furva Schs. (46 i). All the wings quite unicoloroitsly dark brown, only at the border of the forewing 
some yellow, like the apex of the abdomen. Costa of the hindwing somewhat ochreous. Surinam. 
H. similis Rothsch. (46 i). Yellow; forewings with rows of small hemochrome, guttiform spots flown 
together to clouds; they give room to an antemedian transverse band and torn up groups of spots in the distal 
half of the wing. Head and body hemochrome, marked yellow. Hindwings pale yellow. Guiana and Amazon. 
H. lavinia Drc. (46 i). The red on the hindwing increased so much that it only admits yet a yellow 
antemedian chain, some traces at the base and few small spots in the distal area. Body hemochrome; hind¬ 
wings pink. Guiana and Colombia. 
H. persimilis Rothsch. (46 i). Here the yellow appears more in spots as costal triangles and as an irregu¬ 
lar, light cloud above the anal angle. In the <$ the hindwing and abdomen are yellow, in the $ tinged purple 
red. Widely distributed; from Guiana across the Amazon to Peru; the figured $ from the Upper Rio Negro. 
H. pinon Drc. (46 i). The largest species of the genus. It distinctly repeats the colouring of a Melese 
peruviana (43 e); but on the forewing there is in the middle of the submedian vein another yellow spot. Hind¬ 
wings of a deeper red. Santos in South Brazil. 
41. Genus: Pare via Hmps. 
This genus, composed of 13 species, likewise belongs yet to those genera resembling in their exterior such 
genera that do not exclusively belong to the Arctiids; the P. syntomioides , for instance, derives its name from 
its resemblance to certain Syntomidae, such as the Dycladia- species (from the affinity of D. xanthobasis, 28 d). 
— All the species of the genus are very small; some have an expanse of scarcely 15 mm. From Evius, which 
the genus resembles in the venation of the forewing, it deviates by the subcostal coming from the upper angle 
of the cell of the hindwing mostly bifurcating before the margin. In the forewing there is no areola. Sometimes, 
however, also the g hindwings are changed by scent-organs in such a way ( lobata ), that the course of the veins 
becomes quite abnormal. 
46 
tipolis. 
lucens. 
interna. 
ldagesi. 
rhodocras¬ 
pis. 
ockendeni. 
tramoia. 
carinaria. 
incerta. 
declivis. 
furva. 
similis. 
lavinia. 
persimilis. 
pinon. 
VI 
